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Japanese Keep Secrets
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t '. w hI , l , i I. i ,.L l:' -, , I
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:ii'" iio ligi ir -l, n it .'..Ip.in
h " IIII 11 &I'.,J, 11" , I ..i . t -f + " i't
l , li + t h u it ' I l i, . , i i ., . r
I he t.. u -itrec n n 1- , -I ng it ,
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i
G te(;¢ay to Temple.
own sl ople : d Ih, re(l .ff I; woril
for more than t , It no t nthli. iu i.uolilte
ignorance of the lltins oad wh'ere
.:houIts of the comb Iiinesl thi .val . force;s
of the empi:e. A. ,: :oine strwhat fa
ruiliar Vdhith lite eni nltti: al feat uret' of
ijalranese ch;iracier, I !c"tll e that in
accoilntling for Ihis luatrv(elot:F, ,trate
gic' aihieve(lie nt a large lilace lsuist
hr given to the persi:stenot r,:,ricism
which forms, so marked 1i characteris
ticE of the whole nation.
In Japan esotericisrn i.- : tino art.
Heire in the \West the wordl rentirds us
only of thlut lh istic cilts 'or the occult
vagaries of the late Madim EBlatvat
sky, but in alpan the word startds for
life itself. A not inconsiderable ex
peritence among the natives of Dai
Nippon leads me to the conviction that
they alwys li have secrets to, keep, and
that none knows: betiter how to keep
them. The humblest citizen of Tokio
is absolutely silent on any question
be (tdeems none of the foreigner's busi
-ness, and there is everywhere among
the people a persistent and inscrutable
reticence on all matters of which it is
- hoaght lhe t'oreigner may disiapprove.
This obtai:l. more so on glustions un
(der the ban tof the cnsor.
No offense in the t'at',gory of crime
iS deemed worthy of more condign
punishment than the giving away of
secrets, or even intermneddling with
them. One of th' greatestIt Ministers
of State, Viscount Mori. who had
graced the rflice of Plenip:tentiary at"
the Court (, St. lames: and also as
Minister at Washington, was stabbed
to death IF a )g'ove'rnmient cierl for
daring to npush aside wilh his cane a
curtain thai guarded the secret chaim
her where only a priest might gaze
in the repo.e of the iniperial anci:
ft.rs. In ,I.ii an the s'c: e'(t.s af the
dead are as invioJablah, .hi., t of the
iving.
Due to Two Influenccas.
T'his esoteric teen' :F o"( the ,Japa
noese mind, chich has pIl:yed s, con
spiiInouis an itUnportant a palrt iun their
l.sti social ,,!ru political history and in
hheir recent victorie-s over Rust:-ia, is
lle lt t \o Iw lll,1ences that for centU.
ries have h;, ii ruuiiing as a ulited
slrieanl throuh the mtinds of tihe peo
ph,, hearing them on its way.
It is uindohdhledly, first if all ..I har
aeteristi icim, *rited fero Chinl, w'ere,
from the re;iote past, hy the institu
tillls of gulh'.; and othlier secret hin;s,. 1
Ihe inner ,fi, of the ileolhle bI'crmnes I
-1
.i
Jinrikisha.
largely a mystery to the foreigner, and 3
he to Lhem nothing but a "white a
devil." There it stands as a wall that b
aso intruding curiosity nas yet been
able to pierce. International honesty
adgenuine brotherhood may some
day break it down, int so far dipl& w
macy has signally failed to enter' the t
sacred precincts. As in China so in t
Japan, the oracular words, hidden, :
"secret tradition"; hijutsu, "secret
M uenced by Shintoism.
'4 iai. a .et.. tl i rai' ('hi.. a has
" t ,1' I'ld and eptow: li :, ,ese-t,
)r1 tfoisml. The adherent of thii
.: Ih ne' iveS that ithe htlian ph o it
r ,: V ; s, hI t ndet r th1 it i 41n'.\ of
;hal of len. Every .a!anls( is
))Ill ti the iinfilti lce (of Itihs' afle's
T:av 'l. heit is no less h(ly than his
11.ei+hboUs. Esot(triC Shin(tr iso n teaclhs
that the ancestral spirits can be n;mle
tn t ilrtc' late for plarticl('lar ('1i1s, and in
thii s way the Enll)rti' r (an nilatie the
intinit' l nIyriale s l(f the iilmleasult'abli
IlastI nato'lale the hfinl hotmanl 'io -ces
of to--dai.
I; is I ifficult for us to realize o('
'aWnl atit)treciat't ,the apparently super
human Ctl lah e with nl which a ntan is
inspirted wilo Ilietives ihat tilh intinitae
life of the past is pouring itself out
throulgh him for the (deftense of his an
ce,,tr al s thores. Delpend (Ilon it, thi.;
aI'citlnts ian no small measlret for the
ln.txamtllttld Ilravery anti patriotism of
pst- .Iaelanese soilier. L et anly wh(i
Ii s ;t)ht thisf read the imperial mesorag,
(u Adiral Togo. w\\here in his Majetst
tai es occasion to say, "We are glad
trih: g y the loyalty of ouir offihers and
nilt, we have been able to respl:on to
the spliiris of our ancestors," to which
tlo' Adlmiral s ily Drepelies, "That we
hun;e gained a success beyond Ollur t o
t-''Frationi is (tue ito the brilliant viratn u
of y(tur Majesty and to the protection
I)f tIhie sirits of your impllerial ances
thrs. andt not to the action of any hu
.ian being."
Family Is the Unit.
In anothter and no less effective way.
lslo, does this faith tend to perfecting
the .Japlanese soldier. In that country
the faPily, not the inlividual, is the
uni, of the nation. He is taught from
childhood to'sink his individhalitty in
his family, anti that of his family ins
the nation. If you ask ,,m how old he
is. do not be surprised if he answers
four or five hundred years, meaning
his family: as for himself, he has no
individual existence or age. Japan is
a nation of families, and the whole na
tion is one family. In the language uv
Image of Buddha at Kamakura.
the peopie distinctions of person and
number are generally ignored. and
true ipersonal liro<nouns are entirely
lacking. In ancient times if one mem
her f, the family came under the con
dtomnation of the law. all the member.;
had to suffer with him. even wife and
chiltren. The duty of primary import
ance to the head of a house is to per
petuate toe family and keelp the State
supiplied with defenders.
Htigher than duty to family and aris
ing out of it is duty to the Emperor.
which sulpersedes all the duties of
man. In a recent tidal wave in the
northern part of Japan a father turned
a deaf ear to the cries of his drowning
wife and chihlren, permitting them to
perih. that he might save tife Emper.
or's picture, and he was aplplauded for
the act. A spirit of patriotism such
as this. heartless as it seems. leaving
wife and children to chance charity
and piling up the dead in war, when
charged with a faith in the influence
of teeming myriads of its ancestral
ghosts under the guidance of esoteric
Shintoism, is a not unimportant factor
in producing the invincible soldier that
is to-day driving Russia out of the
East.--J. Ingram Bryan in Phi!adVl
phia Ledger.
Following Carnegie's Example.
Morris K. Jessup, the New York
millionaire, is emulating the example
of Andrew Carnegie by giving $i20,0c00
to the town of Westport. Conn., to
erect a lhblic library. Wfestport was
once Mr. Jessup's home and the build
uing is intended as a memorial for the
iJessup family. The town agreed to
appropriate $1,0s00 annually for the li
brary's maintenanre.
History of Kustenji.
Kustenji, the Roumanian port in
which the mutineers of the Kniaz Po
temklns surrendered, is the ancient
town to which the poet Ovid was ban
ished by the Emperor Augustus andr
where he died.
CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT.
-
(lhCen tnt ,li i , t, l hi .t.'-ltttgLag we
c'hdiren g , her round.
i'or si the jI Jlh;ll t tmoth.e: anyvlildy c il r
ihe sits and r < alld dalrn the socksl and
I thin Ik 't' hki e t be to I there0 on tocking
dam.n mg davd
">0o'. nOip lo P nil a tint '--that's how she
,lal'" tie m trw goIng -
\nd l,b tire.i.. dariii-gino lles and Jen
&nd ITed play-. with the s ,'iurýr, but I
don't do a th1ig
But il",k and look at mother and sit
Imost t ie thv're hout lI the tint when .hli
uia- ju t la little girl.
With ptinal -, n anld anhiiionnet atond matto
a httle <.nr.
round tlht Itlim .
And c,',ilhi it ti --. a i, i j npi.g off the
nit ,:a:ii in ith barn.
And sntlolimei: Ihe v'r 'bout Iudians away
otf lIt otii Uýsct \ eo t
An'.d lBh it d Ted run! mi-I guess we like
that kind the bet,
And -onwtims itly'r, hout kins and
luteen it hvl lived so lotng agig,
Jen stayt it's hi-tr dr.--ed rp, and I be
hete thl ' -_o.
W\e chi.ren wettr' or stockings out at a
trrd I'e ll .o YP 'e ,
6o mother -a}., that slide of hel s all shin
lug iii ioi late .
But \'e aru .ad \tlihen the stoking-bag is
t taell is I t lan hAit.
For gosd t-- go with da:'inh., don't you
-Harit t .'rotIIir Leroy, in Youth's I Coln
pamloein.
TE DJIiY'.it I.'IlST PO('KEITTf.
"I want sl p'ilkets in my a l wl plants,"
,ald 'Teddy.
"Yu 111are too lit tle." said manmmlau.
'Phr ase. l itliti'ii." T0 ddy i lºeadt1d.
u'Pocketsl go with iatlts. All tihe, big
boys have tin-li." l
"'e\inll." napnnia replied. "I Siluposn
you tuo hilave thetl. Yep, I will piti
begn in."
"-' nsd i i--'' t " s xlinltd Auni t g mti!y.
"Clari, it u don't neili to i tt thlt . i"ly
have pot"kt.' tI," will have then full
of rulish and il a dreadulf .onditioli
all the inio. Hle's too li1t' for troils
ers, to s:t'- r:othintg of pockets."
Butilt t Put thie pm-hets in, anti-d
Ted wa; happlipy. lie went round with
bis hands in thos, little snuggeries,
feloing ver; proud and grown-up. ani
trying to whistle; and ]Jy and by lie
began to putt things into them.
"If I h 1111,th dairning cotton, I would
mend the stockings." said grandma,
"but it isn't in the h,<ket.'"
"Here it is," said Teddy, taking a
"i
PICTURE PUZZLE.
II
Ofboo,
WIIERE IS WILLIAM TELL'S SON?
-Brooklyn Daily Eagle.
little blahc hall out of his right pocket.
"I found it behind the door. grandnlma.
[ didn't know it was darn cotton; I
thought it was just string."
"You didn't h (pplen to ind my pencil.
Lid you':" asked sister Sue. "I lost it
yesterday and I can't tind It any
where."
"Yes." said Teddy, "it was In the
waste basket. I pickedl it out and pit
it in my pocket. I didn't know it was
ours, Susie," he said as he said as he passed it
to her.
Pretty soon mIanlna could not find
her thimble. ''I had it this morning,"
she said, "and all oa once I missed it.
[ am sorry. for it was the one you gave
me. Emily."
"Here it is," said Teddy. "I found it
down in the pansy bed. I meant to
give it to you, but I forgot."
"It must have fallen off the window
sill," said mamma. "I remember now.
I was sitting by tll garden window."
That afternoon sister Mlary asked me
If anybody had seen a button, for she
had lost one off her blue dress; Tom in
quired if anybody had run across his
Jack-knife, which he was using at noon
and mislaid; Johnny needed a piece
of string in a hurry; and grandpa could
not find a little nail. All these things
Teddy produced as they were wanted.
"I take it all back, Ted," said Aunt
)ox Iof (li,;'ol ,'ttl. (' Vollt"
"Ntl," Tiddty r,plitutl. t w erlytii , "w but I
hi('a e iti, mli0tit lv 1 tI : tll i:t i 't c o(olal te.
.11r. SlitIh ;l\c e it to tit. It's hilly.''
.liunt Emiily latuglhei againt . "Tho'r. ,
('lira," she said. "1 told you so."-Eliz,
abetit ll ill, it Yu it 's ('l iiweieilo y d.
LITT'I"E TII.\ALS.
all llme of"l : l.ltln, wholl quarrell' d with
liid trlophh 1ltlto :ti wolkiimntilt who had
1ie to mli inl : stelp. It too.k a good
while Itroluirly to fini h the work. and
this aiinoeytd the sultani who every day
hald to ptsi through the0 roin where
the step was being lied. The s11I
tillt ('Olitd ili,,l uof the ai1noyanee and
h1110 11010r clioer said lit didn't see how
sell a great s toin t told lie put out
by sutli a little thing. The sultan
he-artd of the 'remi ik andi sent for the
fltor iealitVi. who greatly feared that
tlie reniairk wouldl cost hinm his head.
lie was gI'e'atly surprised when the
stiltanli tol hini tihat ihe would give him
aii. ala(,t, inontey, serviants, horses,
overy lux'urv that a ian could desire,
aill upion ot' contitioi. Th'llis condition
was, tha;it overy d;ay of his life lihe would
('0o' li til' sultaln's p;llte :antd trecive
at slight lpl ot his thivok, tlis lap to
h' amilinistereld by the sultanl himself
or oet' of hi' ser'vant. The tirsi t tihne
thf ilnoo;r eltller cn'pllllhlintol he was to
ie thrust bat k Jillnt) lis origiulal l)poverty.
s.\ the 'year 's went ton this man grewt'
iricli ail ot\\ rful. nI tlinally it he
cantl ei great trhila for hlil to prese'ilt
ilmnself every day at tilie palae and re
(cei\e a tap on his cheek. This was
esplc'hi;lly tr'ying ais his laltterers andl
se'rviuts symnirathizid with himnt and
told hinti it was a shaime that so greatll
a nin:it sholiutld be subject to such an
insult. This bec;inme the trial of his
otlherwise happy lift,. lie felt that he
(colltl ino long'ir tlendure it. O)ie day the
sultaln was ill, dllll his cook was sent
for' to adllinister tllhe tap to the floor
cleaiieir. The fliorr leaner flew into a
violent 1rg at id hanlut'nred the cook in
the face until the sultan appeared.
Whein he saw what had happened, lie
condemned lthe flolo cleaner to his
former pove'rtty Slhyi g. "You now see
how even a little trial may become a
great cross if one has always to bear
it."-Indialapolis News.
AN INTELLIGENT HORSE.
In the city of Oakland, Cal., lived a
few years ago a horse as beautiful, in
telligent and affectionate as ever a
horse could be. "Prince" was his name,
and well it fitted him.
The readiness with which he under
stood what was said to him was re
markabole, says Our Dumb Animals.
"Prince," his mistress would say. "I
would like to visit Mrs. Y-," and, as
M3rs. Y-- was a particular friend of
ins. Prince would trot most readily and
rapidly to her house. Again, Miss
C- would tell him to go to the bank
for money, and there he would go; or
to the stable where oats, bran and hay
were to be ordered, and he would trot
there at a lively rate.
He was always spoken to exactly
I :s a person would have been. Once a
lady who was riding with Miss C
was surprised to have him take her
home and stop before the house.
"Oh, Prince," she said, "won't you
give me a little longer ride?"
He shook a knowing head and raced
around the block twice, stopping then
as before, as if to inform her that the
trip had been of a reasonable length.
No end of little incidents of a like
nature might be related of him.
Mrs. Thurston's successful novel,
"Tho Masquerader," is being trans
lated into Swedish, Norwegian and
Danish.
SCARE OF THE BODY
How to Acquire and Retain the Prilc: ; c."r-s
sion of Good EHeal:.
Sulmmer Disorders of Infancy.
- ill thri'e rllIms s Ai l!;ittg tihe sal'
I lisorlter. The litif an-,e is irritla
ritn dlut to food, inlprul)' 1r in ( n tn, iiy
or lutaiity., poiling in tile stotarh.
T'l'his malady rarly o( ll's ill in
fants fed on good brast Iil l , I nil'-ssF
,someit!lhing occ0( lrs to Ilpse1ti the' mlot ter.
Older 'clhihilrn often have aU:ws
ro111)111 aling too lncllh c.a!ldy, unripe
fruit paslI'y and the liih . In grown
poplae .his disor'der is called a "'bilioi;s
In hot l(I-fed inianis. e c(ially dur
ing the suininer moInts,. it is a very
collmon1 cotmplillt: . Ti] symptoms
are loss of interest in play and sur
roundings. starting in the sleep, cry
ing with colic pains, drawing up the
legs on the abdomen, sharp. shrill cry,
paleness around the mouth, blueness
of the skin and cold feet; in severe
cases, fever, nausea and vomiting
of mucus and undigested food. When
the food has been more than usually
indigestible there are often convul
sions and symptoms resembling those
of inflammation of the brain and
spinal cord.
The writer remembers well a typi
cal case. A child of three years, after
eating a number of windfallen apples
and drinking two cups of mill;, was
suddenly seixed with c.onvulsions. oc
curring every half hour or less, and
remained unconscious for hours.
Sonie effort had been made to empty
the stomach; by vomiting, but in vain.
An enme'tic and tii khtii. the throat with
a feather brought upl a mass of lumps
of unripe apple and large, sour curds.
This soon restored the little one to
consciousness. A thorough enenma and
dose of castor o.1 freed the alimen
tary canal of the undigested food and
poisons plroduced by it; but several
days of fever followed, during which
no food could be retained by the stom
ach, and even water was rejected for
a time.
The best treatment in case of acute
indigestion is to empty the alimentary
tract at once by an emetic of warm
water or the stomach lavage; a thor
ough enema and a mild cathartic to
free the bowels. Stop all food at
once, and (do not try to put anything
into the stomach until the vomiting
ceases, unless it be ice-pills or sips of
hot water.
The colic.pains can often be re- i
lieved by fomentatlons. In the chill
stage at the onset, a warm full bath
or a warm sheet pack is good; and a
hot mustard foot bath when the feet I
are cold. If there is diarrhea, hot I
enemas, followed by tepid or cool I
ones, are often very soothing. In I
cases of infants, especially bottle-fed
babies, all milk should be kept out I
of the food for a time. During the t
first twenty-four to thirty-six hours,
only pure cold water or ice should i
be given. After vomiting and purg
ing cease, the child may be fed a tea
spoonful or two of white of egg (the
white of one egg mixed with four I
ounces or water or gruel). When the i
1patient begins to cotivalesce, milk,
modified and sterilized, may gradually J
be given.
Watch the effects of the change of
food. as the stomach is likely to re
main irritable for a long time, and
relapses are common, which, in hot
weather especially, may result in chol
era infantum, or some other acute in
flamimatory disorder.
Tobacco.
Since Jean Nicot dtliscovered Nico- I
tine, tobacco has had a hard name,
but recent chemical invecstigators tell I
us the world has been on the wrong
track for generations, and that nico
tine has nothing to do with the trem
ors, the nervousness, and the other
ills that afflict the habitual smokler.
The injurious property is, it seems.
carbon monoxide gas, which is the
very constituent that is'dangerouts in
common water gas. The smoker I
should know, then, that in consuming
one ounce of tobacco he produces one
whole pint of carbon monoxide, which
is a very fearsome thing. The cigar
ette, the object of execration by all 'I
good men and women, especially wom
en, produces very little of the monox
ide. btt if the practice of inhaling is
followEd, the deadly gas goes straight
to the bloodtl in the lungs, turns it E
pink and poisons it. The cigar is the
great producer of the obnoxious gas, o
ard would be more harmful than the ti
pipe. were it not for the ordinary n
pipe's incurable filthiness. 0
Scientists are agreed that there ic tl
something bad about tobacco, wlhat
ever its name may be. Yet the sa!es g
are growing at so rapid a rate all over ti
the world that the people seem to be
rushing blindly to their own destruc- ft
tion, unmindful and regardless of their n
doom. And the hardened smoker be- p,
lieves that this is a case where ignor- o0
ance is bliss. d
Simple Test for Pure Air. T
Dr. A. T. Schofleld, In his new book, bh
"Nerves in Order, or The Maintenance e'
of Health," gives the following simple at
test of indoor air which any one can de
easily make: at
"Put one tablespoonful of clear lime o0
water into a half pint bottle that has gi
previously been brought into the room pc
full of water, and emptied there so as
to be :::led with the actual air to be or
tested. If the bottle be then corked m
and the tablespoonful of lime water w
shaken up and down, it will get cloudy tb
with chalk if the air be unfit to or
breathe, whereas it will remain clear w
If it is fairly pure." in
fitt t '
(I lti(0 1: rijI' t I.. l_
m 01 10 b Iln ii tt ii
jo t ur orl. i t- is i~ ,l i . ' It!,
hl)hidj'lly it t\he ,, Il, , :i:i: i t ;t
allO l iic to (X-rair : ju l - O a: t
(,itcow : ( I t ha ' It l , c r - - " a-i.' pt ar
tlia ' lito ls l it nr' it. r! a l:, , pr 
ntld(rs. 'Il't v hil'r tie l tii. -1"' },o .
0o1 . 'Tf til. aa\o:!' .- . Ii;-,'. ,with
gray. thern \v'hit ..
It sho,!d he horne inc mit:d i ,lu' lhe
mosquito is the cite s.to 'C it ualr'
ial in eihti i. ('rtmain sij (.!i.- ,f n:os-r
quitte (.onsltantly tl'i- !'r' l \ 1 hit " !trn i
hr ir ho i m lni . the nair l al lurI:'iti e-.
and in inflitinig th1 ir t hie ,th i'tiet
some of these parlaite. inte, he
blood.
Dr. Schoo has ol.r\tVed It:At hlter
mlllO S(lllilts0('. have a('(t ss to aeti I ts,
their ygite hero:es 1i.-- lur ic)i-s . or
quite ha'l m!ss. Anri ' afrfs-o,,r ried
hars observ d  that i -n pontits of Ital.
where IOi.atO'eo are T!r' ti"t!" ch;ilatedt,
the PeoPhl, are plrac!ical! re" front
onalarial infeio, although ther lrgin'
is nllu ll'allv V'e'y 1lia '100S. It \\oli
stl. Tl, hen, tohai t to wide (ii\'nin th
of acid fruitsl, such as r tiItntl c,.
.straw erlries. anld other rn h lnt,
raftet his may ie nmade ail itpon'ant
factor-in ridling the w,,r'r d of this
vtrey troublesome pest.
Hygiene of Churc hes.
zThe poet tolls us that the groves
were God's first temllas. Fronl a
health standpeoin they lre far sup.t
rior to our magnificent modrn edi
flceos, whete the worshiutlirs cone in
contact with countess gernis lurking
in the buphlostsered earts. antd in the
dusit-laden car pets, and tLeir mindis
are stuelfied by being w coh.l;elled to
inhale the poisons tha ae constatly
they sick or well.
(1ergý men should feel pride in hay
ing their churches hygienicaliy conr
of worship where so many people cona
gregate. The example of the great
Roman divine, the bishop of Fano. in
Italy, is a good one to Ioliow in this
resp!ect. A circular was recently is
sued by him in which he asks the
priests of his diocese to comply with
the following rules:
"1. In every church the floor must
be regularly cleaned with sawdust,
saturated with a strong sublimate
soluthion. This thorough cleaning
shou!d take place particularly after
holidays when great masses of pen
ple have visited the church.
"2. Every week all ordinary chairs
and confessional chairs, should be
Pleasant Prescriptions
ln t wini. ltl hl" i T V,'t t " ii ,i'.
slet inat ur j tie- .our w
IVitht thms lith yep ho 'll lnce you.
{Jiii t-iji-i, - o Ii <1' t , ,;iimtitii
lh'll harni icilt i th mhis a aiis.t
3.Tis, gal ell o!f. he c onfel.
I\\ ' she you thou, h the l nip Ho, w
Hd' is , thin .' ,iiu rt" i- eaf hi ,e
iiutl pinc rain in the malt odr.
Ais id l, itlis is g brkd.
M lyiltb l sni-ulii l tli 'ts y lu;
(Y u b'll hefil him in tIh- o m t,, u , '
And to hise l) ro tmusic hirk.
1,'doo tIs rou of the wcodlanu td.
,the sr e ts of thl e. billves th
And ristninge o hyhis sweetst noteso
thetitdor, I 'life. ating:
getting haling ihne lo mdor lifts. A
tent rp ithedin ltie h ad in ot'y r e.n, d
lo rl'i I in thfa beldnersp
for tirepresent iseason tira air h orii
nariy droom. lilTod get the l grati lt
pest Sleeping Place for Hot Weather.
The healing power of the griat out
of-dons is raotidly becoming known to
Tmher are availing theihselres of the
burative and hygieepi, advantages o
ehe autdoor life.
The present is a sa\orable time for
ntetting used to the outdoor life. A
pent pitched in the yard or a strened
pornh is a far better sleeping place
tory bedroom. Thd get thnd greatest
nossible bonefit from the ouhdoor lifet
,ne needs to live out hont inuously,
hay and night. The average man
ipends one-thir] of his life in sleep.
and health. If this time is spent out
mder the open sky.